Elevation with Steven Furtick - The Bread Is In Your Hands (Holly Furtick)
Episode Date: December 17, 2023In “The Bread Is In Your Hands,” Pastor Holly Furtick teaches us that having compassion is less about signing up to serve and more about serving those who are right in front of us. If you’ve jus...t made a decision for Christ, please respond HERE: http://ele.vc/tIepfr To support this ministry and help us continue to reach people all around the world click here: http://www.elevationchurch.org/giving/ Scripture References: Mark 8, verses 1-9 Luke 6, verses 32, 35-36 John 13, verses 34-35See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Hi, everybody.
Thanks so much for subscribing to our video podcast here at Elevation Church.
We trust that these messages are speaking directly to your heart.
Beginning January 7th, we're moving to audio-only podcast.
We'd love for you to still participate in it.
All you have to do is search for Elevation with Stephen Ferdick.
If you'd still like the video, that's great.
You can subscribe to Elevation Church on YouTube and be a part of these sermons anywhere you are.
Thanks again for being a part of the family.
We'll see you soon.
Of worship already at all of our locations.
Those of you joining us online, Merry Christmas.
What a beautiful time we've had together this morning.
And I love coming to church.
But I love coming especially this time of year
because it forces me to stop thinking about all the things that I have left to do this week
and just spend an hour focusing on why we really celebrate Christmas.
That Jesus came.
He was born in a manger.
and we worship him.
And so today I am really excited about the word that God has given me to say to you, stand on your feet.
I'm going to share our scripture, and we will jump right in.
All right.
Turn in your Bible, if you have one, to Mark chapter 8.
And we're going to start in verse 1.
During those days, another large crowd gathered.
Since they had nothing to eat, Jesus called his disciples to him and said,
I have compassion for these people.
They have already been with me three days and have nothing to eat.
If I send them home hungry, they will collapse along the way because some of them have come a long distance.
His disciples answered, but where in this remote place can anyone get enough bread to feed them?
How many loaves do you have? Jesus asked.
Seven, they replied.
And he told the crowd to sit down on the ground when he had taken the seven loaves and given thanks.
he broke them and gave them to his disciples to distribute to the people and they did so.
They had a few small fish as well and he gave thanks for them also and told the disciples to distribute
them. The people ate and were satisfied. Afterwards, the disciples picked up seven baskets
full of broken pieces that were left over. About 4,000 were present. God, would you bless
this word today? We love you. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen.
All right, give a couple of good Christmas hugs before you take your seat.
Thank you, worship team.
That was amazing.
I think Jenna and John Sow should do more duets.
Hey?
That was really beautiful.
Okay.
Is it okay if I give you a Christmas sermon that's not from a Christmas Bible passage?
Good, because I already am.
First, I want to tell you a short story.
Don't, don't, for all, those of you don't like long stories. I like long stories, but have a short one for you today.
Many of you know that Stephen and I, we got married when we were practically babies, right?
Three weeks after our college graduation at 22 years of old, 22 years of age, we got married.
And we basically moved out of our dorms and into our first apartment. So during our first year of marriage, we were figuring out everything together.
We were figuring out how to get along, how to budget, what we did after work, how to celebrate holidays, what we did on weekends.
We had so many conversations about how his family did this and my family did that.
And little by little, I began to realize that there were things in my childhood that I thought were commonplace and they were actually weird.
So here's an example.
One night after I got home from teaching school, I said to Stephen, I said, hey, I need to get groceries for the week.
Let's just go eat dinner at the grocery store.
And he looked back at me and he said, you mean go out to eat after we get groceries?
I said, no, we'll just eat while we shop.
And by the look on his face, I had one of those moments where I realized my family was not normal.
So, you see, my family occasionally, not like once a week or anything, but occasionally we would eat dinner at the grocery store.
Now, I'm not talking about go to Costco and eat the samples.
We did that too.
I'm talking like sometimes when my mom had a busy week and a long list of groceries for our family of five, we would all go to Publix.
We're shopping is a pleasure.
And while my parents put items in the cart, we would open things up and eat that.
as we walked along. So a deli meat and cheese slices, you know, you roll it together and Doritos straight out of the family size bag and
You're helping me know that this was not normal. I didn't know you're gonna laugh that much
And then when it came time to check out they would just pay for the open items along with the other things in the cart and I specifically remember complaining to my mom one night because I didn't want to eat dinner at the grocery store and
And she was like, well, why?
And I said, I, I want a sandwich.
I don't want to just eat meat and cheese from the deli.
And she said, well, just open the bread and make yourself a sandwich.
And I did.
And a decade later, I realized that other families didn't eat dinner at the grocery store.
The title of my sermon today is, the bread is in your hands.
Let's go back to the disciples for a minute. I shouldn't need to give you too much backstory on this because Pastor Stephen preached on this story just a few months ago. And the sermon was called Navigating Not Enough. Does anybody remember that one? It's the one where he talked about girl math and God math and how, yeah, you remember that one and how enough is not a feeling, it's a place of faith. It was so good. If you missed it, you've got to go back because this is part two of that message. And today I want to open.
up that phrase, enough is not a feeling, it's a place of faith. So what is a feeling? A feeling,
especially this time of year, is tired and irritated, overwhelmed, afraid. And we feel these
feelings when we're faced with a situation or a season where we wonder if we have enough.
And when I find myself in a place of not enough, I automatically think that the solution is
more, right? More time, more money, if I had more help. But the problem is, in the moment,
more is outside of your control. You don't have more. If you could get more, you would get more.
So sometimes the solution is right there in your hands. And what you need is the faith to see
what you actually have. You don't actually need more. You need the faith to see what you already have.
courage to turn it over to Jesus. Now, I don't want to be too hard on the disciples because I do think
that following Jesus would have been simultaneously the coolest thing ever and the hardest thing
ever. But I do have some questions for the disciples, particularly about this story. Now, you might
have noticed in your Bible that this story is called the Feeding of the 4,000. And that's because
just two chapters back, we have almost the same story, but it's called the feeding of the
5,000. And the two stories are almost identical so much so that if both Matthew and Mark,
they tell both stories. So they both tell the feeding of the 5,000, the feeding of the 4,000,
some people would argue that maybe they were the same thing and people got mixed up, but they're
not. So in the feeding of the 5,000, the crowds gathered around Jesus, and he healed people,
taught them and they were hearing and understanding the good news for the first time. And all of a sudden,
so much time had passed that there was not enough food for the people to journey back home.
Because obviously, for a crowd that size together, they would have had to go out to a remote place.
And many of them had come from several towns away. And Jesus felt compassion for the people.
He wanted to give them something to eat. Now, I get it this time, why the disciples were baffled when Jesus told them,
to feed the crowd. And in this particular passage, Jesus just looks at them and he says, you feed them.
And they're like, Jesus, it would take more than half a year's wages to feed all of these people.
And Jesus said, go see what you have. And then the disciple Andrew, does anybody remember this story?
He finds a kid with five loaves and two fish. And they bring that to Jesus, and he takes it,
and he blesses it, and they all eat and they're satisfied. And the Bible tells us it wasn't just 5,000 men,
but it was 5,000 men plus the women and children, and they had 12 baskets full, left over. A miracle.
I mean, the disciples must have been flying high to be a part of feeding that many people, right?
So two chapters later, Mark gives us the account of Jesus feeding the 4,000.
And I'm like, how much time could there have been between these two stories?
So I googled it.
Most scholars think, of course, you think I looked it up in like a commentary or something?
I googled it.
Most scholars think that it was about six months.
So only six months after the disciples found themselves in almost the same exact place.
Crowds gather so large, they have to go out to a remote place.
teaches and heals and so much time passes, they run out of food and they won't be able to make
the journey back home. Okay, look at the passage again. Jesus says, I have compassion for these people.
They've already been with me three days and have had nothing to eat, have nothing to eat.
If I send them home hungry, they will collapse along the way because some of them have come a long
distance. His disciples answered, but where in this remote place can anyone get enough?
bread to feed them. Seriously? Not one out of the 12 thinks to say, Jesus, let's go. We got seven
loaves. Do that thing again, where you multiply the bread. And then another disciple maybe starts singing,
dun dun dun dun dun dun dun. And then they're like, and I believe I see you.
There's 12 of them and not one of them.
Now, maybe they really did forget about the feeding of the 5,000 just six months before.
Maybe they had seen Jesus do that many miracles, and they weren't thinking about that one.
And I do know that in my life there are many times where I forget the things that God has done for me, right?
Like, when I think of the miracles that God has done in my life and the things that I have seen God in the life of this church, it's insane.
I still to this day can smell the smell of the Providence High School drama dressing rooms.
That's where we first started.
And I remember peeking out from behind the curtain because back then I was one of the background
vocalists.
You didn't know that about me, did you?
Because we didn't have anyone who could really sing yet.
And so I was getting the job done.
And I remember peeking out from behind the curtain and wondering if people were going to show up
because we'd added a second service.
And every week they did.
And I remember during COVID,
wondering if people were really going to watch church online from their homes.
And they did.
And I've seen so many miracles in my own life and in my own family.
And yet sometimes when a tough situation arises,
I get this like sudden onset of spiritual amnesia.
And I completely forget all that I have seen God do with my seven loaves of bread.
So maybe they did forget.
That's still a possibility.
But just go with me here because my December imagination was going.
And I started thinking, what if they didn't forget about the feeding of the 5,000?
What if they actually remembered how much work it took to feed 5,000 men plus women and children?
because, look, in my house, I am in charge of feeding five people.
I always plan for a straight teenager or two as well.
And some nights I cook, I like to cook.
So some nights I cook, some nights we order food.
And my strategy is always never throw food away.
Because unless it's bad, which in my house, my kids know it has to look bad or smell bad.
Otherwise, you can eat it.
Or if it tastes bad, spit it out.
It's fine.
Because I don't throw food away because somebody who's always hungry in my house.
my house. And so I always make sure that there's enough food in our fridge and in our pantry.
So some nights, when I'm too tired to feed people, and I don't want to go to the effort
of cooking, and I don't want to go to the effort of ordering and spending the money to
order food, I'm just going to be honest with you. When a teenager looks at me and asks me,
where in this remote place can we get enough food?
Time mustering up the compassion of Jesus.
So we don't break bread, we eat cereal.
Feeding people is a lot of work.
And I just wonder if the disciples remembered how much work it was to distribute food to thousands and thousands of people.
Remember, they had been there for three days too, and they were tired too.
And they had just enough left to split between the lot of them.
and go home. And so as I was feeling like I did not have enough during this busy Christmas season,
it made me wonder if in this moment the disciples' problem was not enough bread, but if their
problem was not enough compassion. Stephen told us in his message that the disciples saw crowds
when Jesus saw people. He had compassion for the people. He said, they've been here three days.
They won't make it home if you don't give them something to eat. And when we're faced with a not enough moment, our first prayer should be, Lord, change what I see.
I think the disciples wanted to eat their seven loaves and go home and get a shower and get some sleep.
But Jesus had compassion on the hungry people, and he knew that he had more to give them.
Jesus wanted this crowd to go home full, physically and spiritually, because he knew that often our physical needs are directly connected with our spiritual needs.
And he wanted to feed the people through the hands of the disciples.
Lord, change what I see.
I want to see people, not problems.
I want to have compassion for the hungry people around me every day, sometimes all day long.
We're all dealing with hungry people.
The person you work with, the lady ringing you up at Target, your kids, your kids teacher, your mother-in-law, your neighbor, your spouse, the person standing too close to you on the subway.
And it's complicated.
And I know it's not easy.
But each moment we have the opportunity to choose to see faceless crowds.
or hungry people. When you see hungry people, you will feel empathy and you will be moved to compassion.
Something inside of you somehow sees someone's pain and responds to it. When you see faceless crowds,
you're thinking about yourself. And this time of year, it is so easy to just get through.
You're tired, you're worried, you're running out of time. But here is what I want to say,
to you today. The level to which you are able to feel the presence of Christ this Christmas
is directly related to how you treat the people in your everyday life. This is not an easy
message. I don't think a lot of people are going to be like, amen, this is a hard one for me.
But what I want to, here's how I want to say it. I am learning that I feel closer to God,
when I am kinder to others. Write that down because that's the main thing I want you to remember
from this sermon. I feel closer to God when I am kinder to others. Now I was raised in church
and I was taught so many wonderful things about the Bible and I was raised to understand
the importance of reading my Bible and praying every day and I was taught how important
it is to attend church and serve and tithe and give. And all of these things help us to hear God
and to know God and to grow in our faith. Those things are the essentials of our faith.
An elevation church would not be what it is today, reaching people around the globe
without the amazing people here who serve and lead and give and type. And if you're one of
those people, thank you. We're still in the process of receiving our year-end offering. And last
week, many of you came forward and you gave. And that money enables us not only to spread the gospel
further with the messages of this church and the amazing messages from our pastor and the songs
and all, but it also helps us to truly be able to show the compassion of Jesus to people who are
actually hungry and living in poverty. It enables us to provide disaster. Disaster. It enables us to provide
disaster relief where it's needed and fund education programs and so much more. It's amazing
what God can do when we give him our loaves, right? However, you can do all of those things
and miss the point. I heard a preacher once say that the greatest indication of your
relationship with God is how you treat others. And not just how you treat the people that you
love, although some of us treat the people we love the worst, but it's how you treat the people
you don't understand. It's how you treat the people you don't agree with. It's how you treat people
who have perhaps treated you poorly. In Luke 6, in Luke 6, Jesus says, if you love only those who love you,
why should you get credit for that? Even sinners love those who love them. Love
Your enemies do good to them lend to them without expecting to be repaid then your reward from heaven will be very great and you will truly be acting as children of the most high for he is kind to those who are unthinkful and wicked
You must be compassionate just as your father is compassionate
Because the scary thing is that the people that Jesus was the most harsh with in the Bible were the religious people.
People who followed all the rules and attended church and prayed the prayers and made the sacrifices.
Because these people have begun to think that doing those things made them closer to God and also better than everyone else.
And there have been times in my life when I thought memorizing scripture and participating in Bible studies and abstaining from certain substances would make me feel closer to God.
And don't get me wrong because all of those things play a huge role in my growth as a Christian.
But the actual growth comes when I apply all of those things that I'm learning to my relationships and my interactions with others.
And the longer I walk with God, here it is again,
the more I realize that I feel the closest to God when I'm kind to others.
Jesus says later in the book of John, a new commandment I give you love one another as
I have loved you, so you must love one another.
By this, everyone will know that you are my disciples if you love one another.
The way we treat others is what sets us apart as believers in Christ.
So let me ask you this.
If the only way for people in your life to know that you are a Christian was not by how often you went to church or how many Bible verses you knew, but was by how you treated other people, what would they say about you?
Now, listen, our outward actions do not change our status with God.
The way I treat others makes me feel closer to God.
But we're all covered by His grace.
Thank God, because we all have moments, right?
Not too long ago, I went to home goods, and I think it was a Saturday because God and everybody was there.
And I drove around, and there was only one parking space available, and I drive a really big mom SUV, but I'm really good at parking it.
And so I whip into this space, and it was close, but it's a big car.
That's how you drive it.
And so I whip into this place and the owner of the car that I got really, really close to,
like probably inches, she happened to be sitting in her vehicle and she watched the whole thing.
And she looked at me and she was like, you almost hit my car.
And I've been driving around looking for this space for a while.
And so I look back at her and I was like, what?
Because what was the best word I could think to say in the moment, you know?
It's the best thing that could.
We all have moments.
Moments we wish we could take back.
Moments I'm not even going to share with you here that are a lot worse than what happened at home goods.
We all have moments that we know are covered by God's grace, but we hope that they're covered by people's grace too.
And there's always forgiveness to be found in Christ.
But we have to realize that our outward actions and our response.
to others can affect our ability to sense the presence and the peace of God in our lives.
And if you're wondering this Christmas, why you don't feel close to Christ, why you don't feel peace in your heart,
maybe you should check how you're treating other people.
Unfortunately, we don't get to choose the people that God has placed in our lives and on our paths.
We don't get to choose the family that we're born into.
Maybe you didn't have to eat dinner at the grocery store.
Marri didn't get to choose who came to worship Jesus that night in the stable,
but we do get to choose how we see the people in our lives.
And I know that the people in your life are messy.
It's messy.
And loving them is complicated.
It's like the farthest thing from simple, what I'm asking you to do.
today because I know there's history and there's pain and there's things that have been said
and there's the way people always have acted. I get it. I'm just asking you to think if you feel
far from God this Christmas, you might need to ask God to help you change the way you see
his sons and daughters because you can have boundaries and be kind at the same time.
You know that phrase hurting people, hurt people?
I want to change it a little bit today and tell you, hungry people hurt people.
Have you ever been hungry in the worst mood?
Because you haven't eaten anything.
If you would just eat something, everything would change, what if you could change someone's day
by sharing some of your bread with them?
The people that you encounter this Christmas, your family,
your co-worker, your family workers, your family members, your co-workers, the person in front of you
in line at the grocery store, they're all hungry. And I know you're hungry too, but I believe
that God sent me here today to tell you that there is bread in your hands. Look back at the
scripture. I have compassion for these people. They've already been with me for three days
and have nothing to eat. If they send them home hungry, they will collapse on the way because
some of them have come a long distance. The disciples answered, but where in this remote place?
Could we get enough food to feed them? How many loaves do you have? Jesus asked. Seven,
they replied. Seven was not much. They would have needed 13 for each of them to have one, but they had
seven. And so they gave their seven loaves to Jesus. You know that you don't have to give everyone a feast.
You don't have to stop and pray with the waitress at lunch today, but you can smile and say thank you and give her a nice tip, whether she got your order perfectly right or not.
You don't have to be an annoying Christian to have compassion on the people around you.
You can be kind within your own giftings and within your own personality.
And I just want to say that extroverts aren't better Christians.
They just like talking to people in line at Target.
Sometimes kindness is listening, not talking.
Listening to a story you've heard before.
Listening to an opinion that you don't agree with.
Sometimes compassion is just walking away.
Sometimes the gift of compassion is biting your tongue.
Sometimes kindness is making eye contact.
I'm telling you, it's way simpler.
than you're making it out to be. Stephen says that I am a no-eye contact person in public. And it's true. I don't know why I'm in Harris Teeter. I have a job to do. I have hungry teenagers to feed. And sometimes I have my audio book in and I'm playing Candy Crush at the checkout. Okay? Like I'm, but sometimes I do that at home too. And I'm checked out. How can you even begin to see the people in your life? How can I even?
and begin to see the people in my life when I'm constantly staring at my phone.
And so while I'm up here preaching to myself,
I feel like I should say to some of the people in this room
that are running around and trying to make everything perfect
and getting the gifts under the tree and wrapped and beautiful
and the holiday meals and the class parties and the Secret Santa
and the family Christmas card and all of those wonderful, beautiful things.
But you know what your family wants from you for Christmas this?
year, they want you to not freak out about the trash on the floor at 8.30 a.m. on Christmas morning.
I'm saying that to myself. I know you're hungry, too. But don't put kindness on your to-do list.
Be like my mom. She said, you want bread? There's bread right here in the cart.
God didn't ask the disciples to prepare a five-course meal. He said, how much bread do you have? What's in your
cart? How can you see the people?
people around you. Sometimes compassion is simply stopping to encourage someone that you know is going
through a difficult season. It's that simple. Two weeks ago on a Saturday night, I was really stressed.
I had a list a mile long to take care of, and I was also trying to prepare a sermon for a lot of people.
And I was trying my best just to tackle one thing at a time.
And I think I did a pretty okay job not taking it out on my kids and my family.
But by the time that I went to bed, my stomach was in knots.
And I don't know if any of you ever go to bed and you're just praying.
You're like, God, just help me not forget anything that I've committed to do.
And I woke up the next morning to a text from a staff member and a friend, her name is Daytona.
and she texted me and she said that she had woken up in the middle of the night and felt led to pray peace over us.
And she just typed out a prayer about the peace of God having authority over me.
That was bread.
I woke up to bread right there on my phone because someone else stopped for a second to think about someone other than herself.
You don't have to be a preacher or a Bible scholar or Mother Teresa to feel.
feed the hungry this Christmas.
And if you're listening to this message and you're thinking, great, now I have to add more
to my list.
I need to find a soup kitchen for my family to serve it.
You're totally missing the point.
Obviously, if the opportunity arises for you to serve in an organization like that, you should do
it.
But the point is having compassion is less about signing up to serve and is more about what is right
in front of who is right.
in front of you. A good friend of mine has been letting a teenage girl in her neighborhood live with her
for weeks this Christmas because she has nowhere else to go except the foster care system.
That is the compassion of Christ. When you have the faith to pray, Lord, here is my bread. Use what I
have. God will always present you with an opportunity. In Mary's prayer, the one that
that she prayed after the angel came to her and told her that she was going to carry the son of God,
she starts off by saying, my soul magnifies the Lord. My heart rejoices in God, my Savior, for he
lifts the lowly. And then she goes on to say this beautiful thing. She says, for he has filled
the hungry with good things. God has compassion for the hungry. And the good news is he wants to feed them through you.
The power came from Jesus, but the bread was in their hands.
Here's the funny thing.
Look at verse 6.
He told the crowds to sit down on the ground.
When he had taken the seven loaves and given thanks, he broke them and gave them to his disciples to distribute to the people, and they did so.
They had a few small fish as well.
He gave thanks for them also and told the disciples to distribute them.
where did the fish come from the disciples never mentioned any fish but maybe someone saw the bread going
around and they just threw their fish into the lot when you give god what you have when you give him
what time you have when you give him the ability you have the resources that you have you will
always have more than enough someone's going to throw some fish into the pile there's always
enough. The key is to see what you have. Count your loaves this morning. And thank God for them. Ask
him to bless them. So this looks like you wake up in the morning and you say, God, here's my bread today.
Thank you for my health. Thank you for my job. Thank you for my family. Thank you for the home that we have to host
people in. Thank you for the car that I have to go Christmas shopping in. Here's my time, God.
Here's my day. Change how I see and interact with people today. Show me what I have in my hands.
We're not going to get it right every time. We're human beings with feelings and emotions,
and we're navigating our own hunger while simultaneously trying to feed others. But the faith to
feed is directly connected to your proximity to Jesus. Think about the order.
The disciples gave Jesus the bread.
Jesus blessed it, gave it back to them, they passed it out. Over and over again, until 4,000 people
were fed. Last Christmas, I was making a big meal for our family. And, you know, first I made a cake.
We have this chocolate chip pound cake that everybody likes. And so I was making that. And of course,
I lick the batter because that's the privilege of being the cook. And then I made a cheeseboard because
I wanted us to have appetizers.
And so I was snacking on the grapes and the cheese.
And I had to make sure the crackers weren't stale.
And then I sliced the bread that I was going to warm in the oven.
And so I ate the little end piece.
And I was making mashed potatoes.
And I had to taste those to make sure that they had enough salt.
And you know what?
By the time I sat down to that meal with my family, I don't know if this is ever having you.
I wasn't really hungry at all.
Because the people in the kitchen have the most access to the food.
And don't you think that the disciples were eating the bread and the fish as they passed it out?
Of course they were.
They got to it first.
As long as they stayed close to Jesus, there was plenty for everyone.
And when you're feeding others, it's an act of service.
Of course it is.
But you benefit from it.
And I'm giving you permission this.
Christmas to lick the bowl. Watch God do something through your hands. He will supply you with everything
you need. He will not only give you the compassion for the people you interact with, but he's also going to
give you the energy to distribute it if you remain close to him. Stay in the kitchen this Christmas
and experience the feeling of being full while you serve. Watch the energy shift in your heart and in your home
while you see the people and you watch God do what he does with the bread that you have.
Before Jesus, they had seven loaves.
After they gave what they had to Jesus, they had so much left over, they couldn't even eat it all.
They no longer had seven loaves.
They had seven baskets full.
And the basket was, the Hebrew word for the basket meant it was like the basket that Paul hid in.
It was a basket big enough for a man to fit in.
They had seven basketfuls left over.
And I want to tell you that joy and peace and contentment is what's going to be in your baskets this Christmas.
And you won't even know where it came from to stay close.
The prophet Isaiah said the virgin will give birth to a son and they will call him Emmanuel,
which means God with us.
Don't miss out on the nearness of Christ this Christmas.
fight for it with everything you have. Let the pain and the disappointments that you face this season
draw you closer to Christ. Let the hardship and the questions that you have draw you closer
to Jesus because everything flows from that close relationship with him.
Before I close, I want to remind you also today that God's kindness and compassion is for you too.
And maybe you should try being a little kinder to yourself this Christmas as well.
Sometimes the person that you're the least kind to is yourself.
You can't stop thinking about all the ways that you have messed up.
And the enemy wants nothing more than to get in between you and Emmanuel.
So the enemy is going to say to you, you should be farther along.
than you are now. And when he does, you press in to Emmanuel and you remind him how far God has brought you.
When the enemy says to you, your kids deserve better than you, you remember that just like God
placed Jesus in Mary's hands, God sovereignly placed your child, your children in your lap, and the bread that's
in your hands is enough for you and for them. When the enemy tells you that you, that you,
you've made too many mistakes. You tell yourself that Jesus came to earth and died so that his
grace would not only cover all of your sins, but empower you to live for him. John 1010, Jesus said
the thief comes to steal, kill, and destroy, but I have come that they may have life and have it
to the full. The message of Christmas is that Jesus humbled himself by becoming flesh and coming to
earth, the word became flesh, and it dwelt among us. His love for you is that great. Emmanuel,
God with us, looks at you with the love and compassion and patience of a father today. He paid a great
price for you. He took our guilt and our sin and our shame so that we could have life to the full.
Not running on empty, running on full. Let him satisfy your soul. Let him satisfy your soul.
today. As I close, I thought I could take the remaining moments that we have to just reflect
on what we've heard today and on the wonder of Christmas. And the holy night when God
became flesh, came to earth, that we might experience his love and compassion for us.
Lord, we thank you for your word to us today. Would you seal it on our hearts?
Thank you for your kindness to us, Lord.
Thank you for your nearness to us in this moment.
May we go out of here today,
full of the love and compassion of Christ for ourselves.
And may it overflow to all those around us.
We love you, Lord.
Thank you for your love and your kindness and your patience with us.
Thank you for your grace that covers us.
And most of all, we thank you for Jesus.
He came to earth as a baby so that we might know you.
In Jesus' name we pray.
Amen.
Thanks for joining us today.
We pray that God has spoken to you in a unique and powerful way through the message.
Well, we are in our year and offering season as a church
where we get the opportunity to reflect back on all the ways that God has been faithful
to our ministry this year, but also to look ahead at what we're believing God for in the upcoming year.
And each year as a church, we get to come around a special offering, an offering that contributes to both outreach efforts in local and global cities, and as well as the expansion of our ministry, continuing to reach people all over with the hope of the gospel.
And we'd invite you to take part and participate in our year-end offering.
To do so, you can go to elevationchurch.org, just click the banner there at the top, and then you'll be able to see everything that you need to be a part of our year-end offering.
You'll see two options.
The first is to begin tithing.
Maybe you've been wanting to prioritize God in your finances, but you haven't taken that step to make a commitment to doing so.
This is a great place to begin.
Or perhaps you've been giving consistently.
In this season, God may be challenging you to stretch above and beyond the tithe to give a sacrificial gift to our year-end offering.
If you're part of one of our physical locations, you can choose your campus there.
Or if you're part of our online ministry, of course, you'll choose eFAM or online, and then enter the amount that you'd like to give.
We're believing for all the ways that God is going to stretch our faith in the same.
this season through our year-end offering, and we can't wait to see what God does through you.
God bless, and we'll see you soon.
This is an IHeart podcast, guaranteed human.
